US7663381B2 - Electrical condition monitoring method for polymers - Google Patents

Electrical condition monitoring method for polymers Download PDF

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US7663381B2
US7663381B2 US12/082,161 US8216108A US7663381B2 US 7663381 B2 US7663381 B2 US 7663381B2 US 8216108 A US8216108 A US 8216108A US 7663381 B2 US7663381 B2 US 7663381B2
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polymer
degradation
electrical
conductive composite
electrical measurement
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Kenneth S. Watkins, Jr.
Shelby J. Morris
Daniel D. Masakowski
Ching Ping Wong
Shijian Luo
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    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01RMEASURING ELECTRIC VARIABLES; MEASURING MAGNETIC VARIABLES
    • G01R31/00Arrangements for testing electric properties; Arrangements for locating electric faults; Arrangements for electrical testing characterised by what is being tested not provided for elsewhere
    • G01R31/12Testing dielectric strength or breakdown voltage ; Testing or monitoring effectiveness or level of insulation, e.g. of a cable or of an apparatus, for example using partial discharge measurements; Electrostatic testing
    • G01R31/1227Testing dielectric strength or breakdown voltage ; Testing or monitoring effectiveness or level of insulation, e.g. of a cable or of an apparatus, for example using partial discharge measurements; Electrostatic testing of components, parts or materials
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N27/00Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means
    • G01N27/02Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means by investigating impedance
    • G01N27/04Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means by investigating impedance by investigating resistance
    • G01N27/041Investigating or analysing materials by the use of electric, electrochemical, or magnetic means by investigating impedance by investigating resistance of a solid body
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N33/00Investigating or analysing materials by specific methods not covered by groups G01N1/00 - G01N31/00
    • G01N33/44Resins; Plastics; Rubber; Leather
    • G01N33/445Rubber
    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N17/00Investigating resistance of materials to the weather, to corrosion, or to light

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  • the present invention relates to methods and apparatus for determining deterioration and remaining life of polymeric material utilizing measured electrical quantities, and, more particularly, for determining mechanical properties and remaining life of a polymeric material by measurement of electrical resistivity of a conductive composite of the polymer.
  • the polymeric materials used in wire and cable insulation and jacketing (and other polymers) degrade with age, especially in severe environmental conditions.
  • the safe operation of existing and future plants such as nuclear power plants requires monitoring of the insulation materials in order to anticipate degradation before performance of the wire and cable is adversely affected.
  • CCM cable condition monitoring
  • Elongation-at-break has traditionally been one of the most common and well-documented CCM methods. This mechanical method measures the elongation of a sample of insulation material just prior to break and is normally expressed as a ratio of the break length divided by the original length of the sample. Since elongation measured in the test is analogous to elongation occurring when bending wire and cable, the results can be easily correlated to actual wire and cable insulation condition. Arrhenius methods described by others are normally used to predict material lifetime at a target ambient temperature from acceleration-aged data.
  • a serious disadvantage of the EAB method is that a relatively large sample portion is required to perform the test. This makes the test essentially destructive since the cable is rendered inoperative when the sample is removed. Even if a cable is sacrificed in order to run a test, some portions of the cable may be difficult or nearly impossible to access for sample removal, as would be the case if the area of interest is within a cable bundle, wire tray, or internal to a penetration. The equipment needed for measurement is relatively expensive and requires specialized skills.
  • Indenter modulus test is a relatively new mechanical test that utilizes a machine to press a small anvil at constant velocity against the outer surface of the cable or insulated conductor while measuring the force exerted on the anvil.
  • the indenter modulus is defined as the slope of the force-position curve.
  • a major advantage of the indenter modulus test is that the test itself is non-destructive. However, the test is of limited use on conductor insulation since access to a sufficient length of individual conductors is often restricted. Also, the test is not practical on cable within cable bundles or trays, or in other confined spaces.
  • Oxidation Induction Time is a chemical condition monitoring method that utilizes small (8-10 mg) samples removed from cable insulation materials.
  • the method utilizes a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) to provide an indication of the rapid oxidation of the sample when anti-oxidants, normally present in the insulation material, are exhausted.
  • DSC differential scanning calorimeter
  • Short induction times indicate exhaustion of the anti-oxidant and anticipate rapid degradation of the material.
  • Sample collection requires access to the cable which limits testable portions of the cable. Measurement requires expensive laboratory equipment and specialized training.
  • Electrical condition monitoring methods include insulation resistance, high potential tests, tan-delta tests, and ionized gas medium tests. These tests are essentially “go-no-go” tests (do not predict the remaining life of the sample) since no well-established methods reliably predict insulation lifetime based on the results. Several of these tests require high electrical potentials to be connected to cables, requiring removal of connected equipment and loads in order for the tests to be performed.
  • an object of the present invention is to provide a condition monitoring method for polymers which provides the ability to measure an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer in a non-destructive manner.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which allows correlation of an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer with a mechanical property.
  • Another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which allows correlation of an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer with remaining life of the polymer.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which utilizes a conductive polymer tracer to monitor the aging conditions in any environment.
  • the methodology of the proposed condition monitoring method utilizes the electrical resistivity of a conductive composite formed from a candidate polymer material as a highly sensitive measurement of a mechanical property (volume shrinkage). Volume shrinkage, in turn, will be correlated as a mechanical indicator of insulation material aging.
  • the method eliminates disadvantages of current methods and provides a condition monitoring method which improves safety and reduces condition monitoring costs.
  • the conductive composite sensor may be distributed within a polymeric product such as electrical cables as a separate filament, or it could be co-extruded as a filament in the product.
  • FIG. 1A is a plot of elongation at break for a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
  • FIG. 1B is a plot of volume change (shrinkage) for a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
  • FIG. 1C is a plot of density of a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
  • FIG. 1D is a plot of electrical resistivity of a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
  • FIG. 2A is a cross section of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor filament made of a conductive composite
  • FIG. 2B is a cross section of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor filament co-extruded in an insulated conductor insulation and a cable jacket;
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a means for measuring the resistivity of a conductive age sensor filament
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective drawing of an electrical cable comprising a plurality of age sensors disposed in the cable jacket;
  • FIG. 5 is a perspective drawing of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor strip disposed in the cable jacket;
  • FIG. 6 is a perspective drawing of a plurality of age sensor assemblies utilizing an RFID to communicate resistivity to an external instrument
  • FIG. 7 is a perspective drawing of a polymeric structure comprising a plurality of conductive composite age sensors disposed in the structure.
  • resistivity electrical
  • conductivity as the reciprocal of resistivity, can be substituted as a measurable electrical property by those skilled in the art.
  • conductive composite polymer is generally meant to include any conductive composite comprising a mixture of conductive particles in a polymer matrix or base, and may include additional fillers, additives and binders.
  • This composite type conductive polymer is differentiated from intrinsically conductive polymers which posses electrically conductive properties without addition of conductive particles.
  • the method of the present invention utilizes measurement of an electrical property of a conductive composite to indirectly measure the aging or degradation effects on a polymeric material.
  • the conductive composite comprises conductive particles such as carbon black particles or metallic particles evenly dispersed or mixed in the polymeric material of interest. Degradation and aging effects which include chain scission and additional cross-linking will result in volumetric changes to the polymeric portion of the composite and will affect electrical properties such as the resistivity or conductivity of the composite.
  • Changes in the volume fraction of conductive fillers can be detected by electrical measurements of the conductive composite. Specifically, the resistivity (or conductivity) provides a measure of the volume fraction of the conductive filler.
  • Resistivity measurements of conductive composites affords very high sensitivity to conductive filler volume fraction changes in conductive polymer composites as a result of polymer matrix shrinkage and densification.
  • the volumetric shrinkage of a polymer due to age-related cross-linking may be on the order of only a few percent over the useful life of the polymer.
  • Selection of the conductive filler type and loading may result in several orders of magnitude of resistivity change due to the volumetric shrinkage. This is especially the case if the conductive filler loading is chosen to be in the percolation zone of the conductive composite.
  • Other aging mechanisms such as loss of volatile components of the polymer during aging also result in an increase in the volume fraction of the conductive filler.
  • the high sensitivity of resistivity of a conductive polymer composite to volumetric shrinkage (or expansion) of the polymer matrix provides an amplified method useful in detecting an measuring the small changes in polymer volume fraction as a result of age-related degradation such as cross-linking of the matrix due to thermal, radiation, and thermal oxidative mechanisms. While direct measurements of volumetric shrinkage of the polymers would provide a quantitative means to detect degradation, this method is usually destructive for many applications, and requires laboratory analysis. Measurement of resistivity, although an indirect measurement of the volumetric shrinkage, provides a non-destructive, in-situ, measurement that is much more sensitive than can be done by normal laboratory measurements of volumetric shrinkage or density, and can be carried out with simple field equipment such as an ohmmeter or multimeter.
  • the amplifying effect of the conductive composite resistivity measurement approach allows measurement of volumetric or density changes smaller than that afforded by direct mechanical measurements.
  • physical aging effects such as relaxation of polymer chain networks of polymers below the glass transition temperature, and creep effects can be detected over short time intervals by resistivity measurements of conductive composites of the polymer. Detection of natural aging effects over short time periods, such as days or weeks is possible by this method, where months or years would be required by conventional mechanical or chemical measurements such as elongation to break, and oxygen induction time (OIT) measurements.
  • OIT oxygen induction time
  • FIGS. 1A , 1 B, and 1 C show elongation at break, volume change and density of ethylene propylene rubber (EPR) under accelerated thermal aging at 125 C.
  • FIG. 1D shows resistivity change for EPR samples under the same aging conditions.
  • resistivity data of polymeric composite materials could be used in several ways. For example, accelerated aging of a composite comprising a specific polymer and a given volume fraction of a conductive filler would result in a resistivity vs. time for the test temperature. Measurement of mechanical properties such as elongation at break or hardness as the composite is aged, would provide a relationship of the mechanical property to the resistivity for the composite. This relationship could be determined by the aging curves, such as that of FIGS. 1A , 1 B, 1 C and 1 D showing the value of the mechanical property vs. resistivity. Or, the relationship could be expressed by a mathematical algorithm by curve fitting methods known in the art. By inclusion of base polymer samples (without conductive fillers) during the aging trial, the mechanical properties of the base polymer could be predicted by measurement of a representative sample of the conductive composite having the same base polymer.
  • Physical aging affects of polymers could be modeled in a similar means by thermal processing a conductive composite, optionally in an inert gas environment, and measuring resistivity vs. mechanical properties such as volumetric shrinkage, density and creep properties.
  • FIG. 2A is a cross section of a multi-conductor cable 201 having three insulated conductors 203 , an outer cable jacket 205 , and an age sensor filament 207 disposed in the cabled conductors.
  • the age sensor filament “tracer” is a conductive composite comprising the conductor insulator polymer as the base polymer and conductive filler such as carbon black.
  • the conductive composite utilizes a second polymer as the base polymer.
  • the conductive composite utilizes metallic or metallic oxides as the conductive filler.
  • the sensor filament may be positioned at other locations in the cable such as outside the insulated conductors and inside the cable jacket.
  • FIG. 2B is an alternative embodiment 202 of the cable of FIG. 1 utilizing a co-extruded age sensor tracer 209 in the insulated portion of the insulated conductor, or an alternative age tracer 211 co-extruded in the cable jacket.
  • the base polymer of the sensor tracers is the same polymer as the insulated conductor or jacket. In other embodiments, a different base polymer is utilized.
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic of a method of monitoring the resistivity of the age sensor 303 of cable 301 .
  • Age sensor filament 303 is distributed along the cable and disposed, for example, along the insulated conductors 305 .
  • a second element 303 A is disposed along the length of cable 301 inside jacket 307 .
  • Second element 303 A may be another age sensor filament similar to age sensor filament 303 , or it may be an insulated or non-insulated conductor such as a metallic conductor.
  • Shunt 309 connects age sensor 303 and second element 303 A to form a series-connected loop 311 which functions as an electrical age sensor for the cable.
  • Conductors 313 connect age sensor loop 311 to terminal box 315 .
  • a resistance-measuring instrument such as ohmmeter 317 measures the resistance of age sensor loop 311 at terminal box 315 .
  • resistance or resistivity calculated from the sensor dimensions
  • the material properties such as elongation-at-break of the insulation polymers may be determined.
  • ohmmeter 317 connects directly to age sensor 303 and second element 303 A.
  • FIG. 4 is a perspective drawing of an alternative method of monitoring cable condition.
  • Cable 401 comprises a plurality of condition or age sensors 403 embedded in cable jacket 405 .
  • Age sensors 403 may be a conductive composite of cable jacket 405 or insulated conductor 407 polymers co-extruded in jacket 405 .
  • conductive composites utilized in age sensors 403 may be made of other polymers designed to degrade in a manner similar to insulated conductors 407 or jacket 405 .
  • a composite condition or age sensing instrument such as ohmmeter 409 may comprise a probe 411 having terminals 413 spaced to provide a resistivity measurement of age sensors 403 when contacted with age sensor 403 .
  • Terminals 413 comprise a predetermined spacing 415 to provide a resistivity reading of age sensors 403 which comprise a predetermined width 417 and predetermined thickness 419 .
  • FIG. 5 is an alternative embodiment 501 of the cable of FIG. 4 having a continuous condition/age sensor strip 503 .
  • Sensor strip 503 comprises a predetermined width and thickness similar to age sensors 403 of FIG. 4 .
  • FIG. 6 is an embodiment of another method of monitoring age sensors 603 of cable 601 by utilizing radio frequency identification (RFID) tag assemblies 605 .
  • Tag assemblies 605 comprise age sensors 603 made from a conductive composite connected to an RFID chip 607 .
  • RFID chip 607 may comprise an antenna 607 A for active or passive communication with a reader 609 .
  • a plurality of tag assemblies 605 may disposed in cable 601 , for example by attaching assemblies 605 to tape 611 and wrapping tape 611 around insulated conductors 613 .
  • Tape 611 may comprise an adhesive surface 615 for retaining tag assemblies 605 .
  • a RFID tag assembly 605 may be connected to sensor loop 311 of cable 301 of FIG. 3 and embedded in cable 301 .
  • FIG. 7 shows the method of FIG. 4 applied to other extruded or cast polymer products 701 such as extruded or cast polymer siding, extruded or cast polymer pipe or tube, extruded, cast or laid-up composite structures such as aircraft structural parts and boat hulls.
  • Age/condition sensors 703 are made from conductive composites as discussed in previous examples, and may be co-extruded, cast, or they may be applied as conductive hot-melt or adhesive composites. Continuous age sensor strips such as strip 503 of FIG. 5 may be substituted for age sensors 703 .
  • age sensor conductive composites utilize the base polymer of the structure they are monitoring, such as the insulation polymer for wire and cable age sensors, or PVC for house siding.
  • the age sensor composite may be “designed” to age at the same, or in some cases faster than the base polymer by altering the filler content, adding or deleting anti-oxidants to the age sensor, or “pre-aging” the age sensor by accelerated aging techniques to match aging performance with the polymeric structure being monitored. These techniques may also be used to alter the response of the age sensor to more nearly follow natural aging of the polymer.

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Abstract

An electrical condition monitoring method utilizes measurement of electrical resistivity of a conductive composite degradation sensor to monitor environmentally induced degradation of a polymeric product such as insulated wire and cable. The degradation sensor comprises a polymeric matrix and conductive filler. The polymeric matrix may be a polymer used in the product, or it may be a polymer with degradation properties similar to that of a polymer used in the product. The method comprises a means for communicating the resistivity to a measuring instrument and a means to correlate resistivity of the degradation sensor with environmentally induced degradation of the product.

Description

This application is a Divisional application of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/506,518 filed May 9, 2005 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,414,416 which claims priority of PCT/US03/06844 filed Mar. 5, 2003 which claims priority for U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/362,157 filed Mar. 6, 2002.
This application resulted, in part, from research funded by the U.S. Department of Energy. Certain rights for any intellectual property resulting from this application may apply to the Government of the United States.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for determining deterioration and remaining life of polymeric material utilizing measured electrical quantities, and, more particularly, for determining mechanical properties and remaining life of a polymeric material by measurement of electrical resistivity of a conductive composite of the polymer.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The polymeric materials used in wire and cable insulation and jacketing (and other polymers) degrade with age, especially in severe environmental conditions. The safe operation of existing and future plants such as nuclear power plants requires monitoring of the insulation materials in order to anticipate degradation before performance of the wire and cable is adversely affected.
Age related wire and cable failure is primarily a mechanical mechanism. As the insulation ages, it becomes embrittled and eventually fails mechanically by cracking and exposing bare conductors. The industry has spent considerable time and effort to develop condition monitoring methods which monitor installed wire and cable and ensure that the materials have not degraded excessively. These methods are also used to predict safe operating lifetime of wire and cable insulation materials for anticipated environmental conditions. Presently, cable condition monitoring (CCM) methods are categorized as mechanical methods, chemical methods and electrical methods.
Elongation-at-break (EAB) has traditionally been one of the most common and well-documented CCM methods. This mechanical method measures the elongation of a sample of insulation material just prior to break and is normally expressed as a ratio of the break length divided by the original length of the sample. Since elongation measured in the test is analogous to elongation occurring when bending wire and cable, the results can be easily correlated to actual wire and cable insulation condition. Arrhenius methods described by others are normally used to predict material lifetime at a target ambient temperature from acceleration-aged data.
A serious disadvantage of the EAB method is that a relatively large sample portion is required to perform the test. This makes the test essentially destructive since the cable is rendered inoperative when the sample is removed. Even if a cable is sacrificed in order to run a test, some portions of the cable may be difficult or nearly impossible to access for sample removal, as would be the case if the area of interest is within a cable bundle, wire tray, or internal to a penetration. The equipment needed for measurement is relatively expensive and requires specialized skills.
Indenter modulus test is a relatively new mechanical test that utilizes a machine to press a small anvil at constant velocity against the outer surface of the cable or insulated conductor while measuring the force exerted on the anvil. The indenter modulus is defined as the slope of the force-position curve. A major advantage of the indenter modulus test is that the test itself is non-destructive. However, the test is of limited use on conductor insulation since access to a sufficient length of individual conductors is often restricted. Also, the test is not practical on cable within cable bundles or trays, or in other confined spaces.
Oxidation Induction Time (OIT) is a chemical condition monitoring method that utilizes small (8-10 mg) samples removed from cable insulation materials. The method utilizes a differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) to provide an indication of the rapid oxidation of the sample when anti-oxidants, normally present in the insulation material, are exhausted. Short induction times indicate exhaustion of the anti-oxidant and anticipate rapid degradation of the material. Sample collection requires access to the cable which limits testable portions of the cable. Measurement requires expensive laboratory equipment and specialized training.
Electrical condition monitoring methods include insulation resistance, high potential tests, tan-delta tests, and ionized gas medium tests. These tests are essentially “go-no-go” tests (do not predict the remaining life of the sample) since no well-established methods reliably predict insulation lifetime based on the results. Several of these tests require high electrical potentials to be connected to cables, requiring removal of connected equipment and loads in order for the tests to be performed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Therefore an object of the present invention is to provide a condition monitoring method for polymers which provides the ability to measure an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer in a non-destructive manner.
Another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which allows correlation of an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer with a mechanical property.
Another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which allows correlation of an electrical property of a conductive composite of the polymer with remaining life of the polymer.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a condition monitoring method which utilizes a conductive polymer tracer to monitor the aging conditions in any environment.
The methodology of the proposed condition monitoring method utilizes the electrical resistivity of a conductive composite formed from a candidate polymer material as a highly sensitive measurement of a mechanical property (volume shrinkage). Volume shrinkage, in turn, will be correlated as a mechanical indicator of insulation material aging. The method eliminates disadvantages of current methods and provides a condition monitoring method which improves safety and reduces condition monitoring costs.
The incorporation of inert conductive particles into the polymer to form a conductive composite provides several significant advantages for condition monitoring:
    • (1) A small change in volume of the conductive composite results in a large change in electrical resistivity. A few percent change in volume fraction of the insulation material provides a potential of 3-5 orders of magnitude or more change in the resistivity of the composite. This high measurement sensitivity provides an opportunity to detect and monitor small aging effects which current condition monitoring methods are insensitive to; and
    • (2) Measurement of the electrical resistivity is a simple measurement requiring no special equipment, expertise or removal from service.
The conductive composite sensor may be distributed within a polymeric product such as electrical cables as a separate filament, or it could be co-extruded as a filament in the product.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims and accompanying drawings where:
FIG. 1A is a plot of elongation at break for a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
FIG. 1B is a plot of volume change (shrinkage) for a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
FIG. 1C is a plot of density of a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
FIG. 1D is a plot of electrical resistivity of a conductive composite sample of ethylene propylene rubber vs. age time at 125 C.
FIG. 2A is a cross section of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor filament made of a conductive composite;
FIG. 2B is a cross section of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor filament co-extruded in an insulated conductor insulation and a cable jacket;
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a means for measuring the resistivity of a conductive age sensor filament;
FIG. 4 is a perspective drawing of an electrical cable comprising a plurality of age sensors disposed in the cable jacket;
FIG. 5 is a perspective drawing of an electrical cable comprising an age sensor strip disposed in the cable jacket;
FIG. 6 is a perspective drawing of a plurality of age sensor assemblies utilizing an RFID to communicate resistivity to an external instrument; and
FIG. 7 is a perspective drawing of a polymeric structure comprising a plurality of conductive composite age sensors disposed in the structure.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The following is a description of the preferred embodiments of a method for determining the degradation of a polymeric material by use of an electrical measurement.
Definitions: Although the term resistivity (electrical) is used throughout the specification, it is understood that conductivity, as the reciprocal of resistivity, can be substituted as a measurable electrical property by those skilled in the art.
The term conductive composite polymer, as used in this specification, is generally meant to include any conductive composite comprising a mixture of conductive particles in a polymer matrix or base, and may include additional fillers, additives and binders. This composite type conductive polymer is differentiated from intrinsically conductive polymers which posses electrically conductive properties without addition of conductive particles.
The method of the present invention utilizes measurement of an electrical property of a conductive composite to indirectly measure the aging or degradation effects on a polymeric material. In the preferred embodiments, the conductive composite comprises conductive particles such as carbon black particles or metallic particles evenly dispersed or mixed in the polymeric material of interest. Degradation and aging effects which include chain scission and additional cross-linking will result in volumetric changes to the polymeric portion of the composite and will affect electrical properties such as the resistivity or conductivity of the composite.
Degradation and aging mechanisms of polymers are numerous and complex, but cross-linking of polymer chains, caused by thermal exposure, radiation exposure, and thermal-oxidative mechanisms has been shown in the literature to result in increased packing density of the polymer chains, resulting in densification and volumetric shrinkage. If conductive fillers are chosen which are relatively inert for the environments in which the composites are used and tested, the volume fraction of the filler will remain constant with degradation of the polymer matrix. The resulting volumetric shrinkage of the polymer matrix of a conductive composite results in an increase in the volume fraction of the conductive filler particles in the composite.
Changes in the volume fraction of conductive fillers can be detected by electrical measurements of the conductive composite. Specifically, the resistivity (or conductivity) provides a measure of the volume fraction of the conductive filler.
Resistivity measurements of conductive composites affords very high sensitivity to conductive filler volume fraction changes in conductive polymer composites as a result of polymer matrix shrinkage and densification. For example, the volumetric shrinkage of a polymer due to age-related cross-linking may be on the order of only a few percent over the useful life of the polymer. Selection of the conductive filler type and loading may result in several orders of magnitude of resistivity change due to the volumetric shrinkage. This is especially the case if the conductive filler loading is chosen to be in the percolation zone of the conductive composite. Other aging mechanisms, such as loss of volatile components of the polymer during aging also result in an increase in the volume fraction of the conductive filler.
The high sensitivity of resistivity of a conductive polymer composite to volumetric shrinkage (or expansion) of the polymer matrix provides an amplified method useful in detecting an measuring the small changes in polymer volume fraction as a result of age-related degradation such as cross-linking of the matrix due to thermal, radiation, and thermal oxidative mechanisms. While direct measurements of volumetric shrinkage of the polymers would provide a quantitative means to detect degradation, this method is usually destructive for many applications, and requires laboratory analysis. Measurement of resistivity, although an indirect measurement of the volumetric shrinkage, provides a non-destructive, in-situ, measurement that is much more sensitive than can be done by normal laboratory measurements of volumetric shrinkage or density, and can be carried out with simple field equipment such as an ohmmeter or multimeter.
The amplifying effect of the conductive composite resistivity measurement approach allows measurement of volumetric or density changes smaller than that afforded by direct mechanical measurements. For example physical aging effects, such as relaxation of polymer chain networks of polymers below the glass transition temperature, and creep effects can be detected over short time intervals by resistivity measurements of conductive composites of the polymer. Detection of natural aging effects over short time periods, such as days or weeks is possible by this method, where months or years would be required by conventional mechanical or chemical measurements such as elongation to break, and oxygen induction time (OIT) measurements.
EXAMPLES
FIGS. 1A, 1B, and 1C show elongation at break, volume change and density of ethylene propylene rubber (EPR) under accelerated thermal aging at 125 C. FIG. 1D shows resistivity change for EPR samples under the same aging conditions.
Use of resistivity data of polymeric composite materials could be used in several ways. For example, accelerated aging of a composite comprising a specific polymer and a given volume fraction of a conductive filler would result in a resistivity vs. time for the test temperature. Measurement of mechanical properties such as elongation at break or hardness as the composite is aged, would provide a relationship of the mechanical property to the resistivity for the composite. This relationship could be determined by the aging curves, such as that of FIGS. 1A, 1B, 1C and 1D showing the value of the mechanical property vs. resistivity. Or, the relationship could be expressed by a mathematical algorithm by curve fitting methods known in the art. By inclusion of base polymer samples (without conductive fillers) during the aging trial, the mechanical properties of the base polymer could be predicted by measurement of a representative sample of the conductive composite having the same base polymer.
By incorporating aging trials of a conductive composite at several temperatures, measuring resistivity and mechanical properties vs. aging time, Arrhenius methodology and/or time/temperature superposition known in the art could be used to predict remaining lifetime of the composite (or base polymer) as a function of aging temperature. In-situ measurement of the resistivity of a test or trial portion of the polymer having conductive filler could be used to verify the remaining life of the polymer and act as an indirect measurement of desired mechanical properties.
Physical aging affects of polymers could be modeled in a similar means by thermal processing a conductive composite, optionally in an inert gas environment, and measuring resistivity vs. mechanical properties such as volumetric shrinkage, density and creep properties.
FIG. 2A is a cross section of a multi-conductor cable 201 having three insulated conductors 203, an outer cable jacket 205, and an age sensor filament 207 disposed in the cabled conductors. In the preferred embodiments, the age sensor filament “tracer” is a conductive composite comprising the conductor insulator polymer as the base polymer and conductive filler such as carbon black. In other embodiments, the conductive composite utilizes a second polymer as the base polymer. In still other embodiments, the conductive composite utilizes metallic or metallic oxides as the conductive filler. The sensor filament may be positioned at other locations in the cable such as outside the insulated conductors and inside the cable jacket.
FIG. 2B is an alternative embodiment 202 of the cable of FIG. 1 utilizing a co-extruded age sensor tracer 209 in the insulated portion of the insulated conductor, or an alternative age tracer 211 co-extruded in the cable jacket. In the preferred embodiments, the base polymer of the sensor tracers is the same polymer as the insulated conductor or jacket. In other embodiments, a different base polymer is utilized.
FIG. 3 is a schematic of a method of monitoring the resistivity of the age sensor 303 of cable 301. Age sensor filament 303 is distributed along the cable and disposed, for example, along the insulated conductors 305. A second element 303A, is disposed along the length of cable 301 inside jacket 307. Second element 303A may be another age sensor filament similar to age sensor filament 303, or it may be an insulated or non-insulated conductor such as a metallic conductor. Shunt 309 connects age sensor 303 and second element 303A to form a series-connected loop 311 which functions as an electrical age sensor for the cable. Conductors 313 connect age sensor loop 311 to terminal box 315. A resistance-measuring instrument, such as ohmmeter 317 measures the resistance of age sensor loop 311 at terminal box 315. By monitoring resistance (or resistivity calculated from the sensor dimensions) changes in age sensor loop 311 and comparing the results to accelerated aged conductive composites and insulation base polymers, the material properties such as elongation-at-break of the insulation polymers may be determined.
In other embodiments ohmmeter 317 connects directly to age sensor 303 and second element 303A.
FIG. 4 is a perspective drawing of an alternative method of monitoring cable condition. Cable 401 comprises a plurality of condition or age sensors 403 embedded in cable jacket 405. Age sensors 403 may be a conductive composite of cable jacket 405 or insulated conductor 407 polymers co-extruded in jacket 405. In other embodiments, conductive composites utilized in age sensors 403 may be made of other polymers designed to degrade in a manner similar to insulated conductors 407 or jacket 405.
A composite condition or age sensing instrument such as ohmmeter 409 may comprise a probe 411 having terminals 413 spaced to provide a resistivity measurement of age sensors 403 when contacted with age sensor 403. Terminals 413 comprise a predetermined spacing 415 to provide a resistivity reading of age sensors 403 which comprise a predetermined width 417 and predetermined thickness 419.
FIG. 5 is an alternative embodiment 501 of the cable of FIG. 4 having a continuous condition/age sensor strip 503. Sensor strip 503 comprises a predetermined width and thickness similar to age sensors 403 of FIG. 4.
FIG. 6 is an embodiment of another method of monitoring age sensors 603 of cable 601 by utilizing radio frequency identification (RFID) tag assemblies 605. Tag assemblies 605 comprise age sensors 603 made from a conductive composite connected to an RFID chip 607. RFID chip 607 may comprise an antenna 607A for active or passive communication with a reader 609. A plurality of tag assemblies 605 may disposed in cable 601, for example by attaching assemblies 605 to tape 611 and wrapping tape 611 around insulated conductors 613. Tape 611 may comprise an adhesive surface 615 for retaining tag assemblies 605. In still other embodiments, a RFID tag assembly 605 may be connected to sensor loop 311 of cable 301 of FIG. 3 and embedded in cable 301.
FIG. 7 shows the method of FIG. 4 applied to other extruded or cast polymer products 701 such as extruded or cast polymer siding, extruded or cast polymer pipe or tube, extruded, cast or laid-up composite structures such as aircraft structural parts and boat hulls. Age/condition sensors 703 are made from conductive composites as discussed in previous examples, and may be co-extruded, cast, or they may be applied as conductive hot-melt or adhesive composites. Continuous age sensor strips such as strip 503 of FIG. 5 may be substituted for age sensors 703.
In the preferred embodiments, age sensor conductive composites utilize the base polymer of the structure they are monitoring, such as the insulation polymer for wire and cable age sensors, or PVC for house siding. In some embodiments, the age sensor composite may be “designed” to age at the same, or in some cases faster than the base polymer by altering the filler content, adding or deleting anti-oxidants to the age sensor, or “pre-aging” the age sensor by accelerated aging techniques to match aging performance with the polymeric structure being monitored. These techniques may also be used to alter the response of the age sensor to more nearly follow natural aging of the polymer.
Although the description above contains many specifications, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.

Claims (17)

1. A method of determining environmentally induced degradation of a first polymer, the method comprising the steps of:
adding conductive particles to a second polymer to form a conductive composite;
making an electrical connection with the conductive composite and measuring an electrical property of the conductive composite; and
equating a change in the electrical property of the conductive composite with the electrical property of a previously degraded sample of the conductive composite to determine the degradation of the first polymer, said change in the electrical property consistent with a decrease in electrical resistivity.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the measured electrical property is electrical resistivity.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the measured electrical property is electrical conductivity.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the degradation of the first polymer is a mechanical degradation.
5. The method of claim 4 wherein the mechanical degradation is a degradation of a mechanical property selected from the group of a strength property, a hardness property, and an elongation property.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein said second polymer is selected to degrade in a manner similar to said first polymer.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the previously degraded sample was degraded by an accelerated aging means.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein the accelerated aging means comprises aging in an environment elevated in temperature as compared to the normal operating temperature of said first polymer.
9. The method of claim 7 wherein the accelerated aging means comprises aging in an elevated radiation environment.
10. The method of claim 7 wherein the accelerated aging means comprises aging in an elevated humidity environment.
11. The method of claim 1 wherein the second polymer comprises the first polymer.
12. A degradation sensor for monitoring environmentally induced degradation of a product comprising a first polymer, said degradation sensor comprising:
a first quantity of conductive particles dispersed in a second polymer to define a conductive composite portion;
a means for communicating an electrical measurement of the conductive composite portion to an electrical measurement apparatus; and
a means for correlating a change in said electrical measurement with a previously degraded sample of said conductive composite portion to indicate environmentally induced degradation of said first polymer, said change in said electrical measurement consistent with a decrease in resistivity.
13. The degradation sensor of claim 12 wherein the means for communicating an electrical measurement of the conductive composite portion to an electrical measurement apparatus comprises said conductive composite portion disposed on an outside surface of the product whereby said electrical measurement is made by a contact electrical measurement instrument.
14. The degradation sensor of claim 12 wherein the means for communicating an electrical measurement of the conductive composite portion to an electrical measurement apparatus comprises conductors communicating with the conductive composite portion.
15. The degradation sensor of claim 12 wherein the means for communicating an electrical measurement of the conductive composite portion to an electrical measurement apparatus comprises an electromagnetic emitter connected to the conductive composite portion.
16. The degradation sensor of claim 12 wherein the electromagnetic emitter is a radio frequency identification tag.
17. A self-monitoring polymeric product for detecting environmentally induced degradation comprising:
a first polymer defining a portion of the polymeric product;
a first quantity of conductive particles dispersed in a second polymer portion to define a conductive composite degradation sensor;
a means for communicating an electrical measurement of the degradation sensor to an electrical measurement apparatus; and
a means equating a change in the electrical measurement of the conductive composite degradation sensor with an electrical measurement of a previously environmentally degraded sample of the conductive composite degradation sensor to determine the degradation of the first polymer, said change in the electrical measurement consistent with a decrease in electrical resistivity.
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